Tricycle Blog

President Bush, apparently tired of mowing down plastic army men with rubber bands, called the Dalai Lama and expressed concern for his health, which is a very nice gesture. The Dalai Lama canceled an upcoming visit to Germany and Switzerland due to health concerns, but is currently reported to be recuperating well from his earlier illness.
At the Dalai Lama's wish, the Tibetan parliament in exile is convening an emergency session in November to discuss the future of the movement:
Samdhong Rinpoche, the Kalon Tripa or prime minister of Tibet's government in exile, tells VOA News this year's events have created a seismic shift.
"Since March 2008 there have been a lot of protests and, then, international sympathy. A great change has been taking place during these days.
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A new article hosted at The Buddhist Channel discusses militant developments among Burma's young monks. Some are beginning to question the usefulness of nonviolent tactics in their struggles with the country's repressive ruling regime. According to the article, some monks are considering taking up guns against their enemies. In response, a number of Buddhist blogs (mainly by Westerners) have objected to the idea of armed monks.
Leaving aside the question of whether it is strategically sound for Burma's monks to take up arms at this moment, it is worth acknowledging that coordinated violence by Buddhist monks is hardly a new phenomenon. Monastic armies, often directed by the heads of major lineages or temples, have played important historical roles in such places as Tibet, Japan, and Korea. These soldier-monks were most often employed in pitched battle against rival monasteries or forms of Bud
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Chinese citizens who came to the capital to protest government policy are still in jail ten days later, the New York Times reports. One of the detainees is a 79-year-old woman. China sais it would allow protest in designated areas during the Olympics, but then arrested protesters before they could get media attention.
The detainees may have a long wait: two documentary filmakers were held prisoner in Tibet for six months for interviewing people in restive Amdo province.
And a monk tells the AP he was interrogated and tortured for two months by Chinese authorities. His crime? Speaking to foreign media.
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In case you haven’t noticed, there’s been a lot of activity on this blog and elsewhere around the Buddhist web relating to the Dorje Shugden controversy. While we take no position on this rather arcane sectarian dispute, we have covered it in the past. In order to shed some light on the controversy, we reproduce here the opening two pages of a special section from the Spring 1998 issue with links to the section's contents, including interviews with Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, leader of the New Kadampa Tradition, and Thubten Jigme Norbu, the recently deceased brother of the Dalai Lama. Click on the images below to see larger versions of the opening spread, and the links below that to read the articles themselves. - The Editors
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Aung San Suu Kyi accepts food for the first time in a month.
The Burmese junta has asked for foreign help in reviving the crucial rice-growing region that was ravaged by the cyclone.
There's a PEN-sponsored fundraiser for Burma soon in New York City:
Kiran Desai, Siri Hustvedt, Joseph Lelyveld, Orhan Pamuk, Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, Salman Rushdie, and special
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From my viewpoint, Buddhism is not about getting enlightened—it’s about being kind. If I have a chance at the time of my death to take an accounting of what I’ve done, I won’t be asking how enlightened I’ve become, I’ll be asking how much kindness I’ve shown to others.
This is how the Buddha began, who set out walking the earth not in quest of enlightenment but in search of a means to end the suffering he saw all about him. If I ever hope to realize a generous, loving, merciful, nonviolent human society, I too must carry on the daily practice of generosity, love, mercy and nonviolence that the Buddha set in motion. This is the practical and ordinary work of the bodhisattva.
And yet the capacity for kindness is an invariable consequence of enlightenment, for enlightenment and compassion are not merely mutually reinforcing but one and the same, two movements of one understanding. And that understanding is the direct knowing that nowhere does there exist a single separate self.
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The Dalai Lama calls for a meeting of Tibetan leaders to discuss the ongoing peace talks with China. Will he find a serious partner for peace and an end to political repression in Beijing?
The New York Times reviews Tibet: Beyond Fear:
“Tibet: Beyond Fear,” on Saturday on the satellite channel Link TV, is advocacy filmmaking at its most brazen: it ends with a direct appeal from the Dalai Lama for the free-Tibet cause.
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His Holiness receives a warm welcome at his home away from home. Doctors in Mumbai say he has nothing to worry about.
And The American Conservative sputters about how liberals love Tibet:
The driving force behind Tibetophilia today is not political solidarity with the Tibetans and certainly not any positive argument for full democratic equality, but rather a sense of disgust with Western life. In Rawson’s words, “the West perceives some lack within itself” and seeks to find fulfilment in the ostensibly preserved “pure East.” Ironically, then, Free Tibet activism has a colonial bent to it: wealthy Westerners pursuing emotional occupation.
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It's not a great time to be running Korea -- either Korea. Kim Jong-Il reportedly had a stroke and then surgery. South Korea and the world watch anxiously.
And more from restive Thailand, which just ousted its Prime Minister:
More than an attack on the sitting government, the protests grow out of deep political and social divides that have hardened over the past three years and threaten the stability of Thailand.
The protesters who are now camped in the mud at Government House represent the latest turn in a long-running struggle between democratic ideals and a traditional, hierarchical society that feels disenfranchised by democratic change.
This time, whatever the outcome of the confrontation, analysts say democracy is likely to suffer.
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Why else would he miss the party for the 60th anniversary of North Korea?
North Korea did not stage a massive military parade for its 60th anniversary on Tuesday and its top leader, Kim Jong-il, failed to attend a scaled-down celebration.
The unexpectedly subdued ceremony came amid news reports that Mr. Kim, 66, might be seriously ill.
For the 50th and 55th anniversaries of his country’s founding, Mr. Kim attended elaborate parades in which columns of armored vehicles and rocket launchers rumbled through Pyongyang’s main plaza as legions of goose-stepping soldiers saluted him.
Although 60th anniversaries are important milestones in Korea, Tuesday’s parade featured only civil defense militia groups and ordinary citizens, according to Yonhap, South Korea’s main news agency, which monitors North Korean news.
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Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej was finally forced out of office not by protests but by the Courts:
Samak, 73, a self-proclaimed foodie, hosted a popular television cooking show -- ''Tasting and Complaining'' -- for seven years before becoming prime minister. But he also made several appearances after taking office, breaking a constitutional prohibition on private employment while in office.
This isn't the end of Thailand's political problems b a long shot, and they still have an active insurgency in the South.
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South Koren President Lee Myung-bak will express regret over the perceived pro-Christian bias in his administration.
And the Beckhams have joined Amy Winehouse on the Who's Buddhist Now? rumors circuit.
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Her own National League of Democracy disagrees.
Neoconservative Robert Kaplan says the U.S. should focus more on Burmese minorities in its pursuit of American interests. Why do neoconservatives care about Burma? Because of the nation's close relationship with China of course.
Sri Lanka bars foreign aid workers from visiting the rebel-held north:
Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa said Monday the government decided to order all foreign aid workers from the territory under rebel control for their own protection.
"We can't assure the security of these people," Rajapaksa told The Associated Press. "We are taking precautions."
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The 86-year-old retired teacher passed away in his Indiana home. He didn't always agree with his brother:
While the brothers were close, they held different views about Tibet's future.
The Dalai Lama advocates a "middle path" policy that espouses "meaningful autonomy" for Tibet, rather than the full independence that some activists are seeking.
But Rinpoche, a retired professor of Tibetan studies at Indiana University, "wanted nothing but full independence for Tibet.
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His Holiness the Dalai Lama is recovering well and will soon return to work, according to an aide. The 73-year-old DL was treated for exhaustion in an Indian hospital after his travels during the Olympics.
Britain's Telegraph reports that pro-Tibet British and American protesters were tied to chairs and deprived of sleep during interrogations by Chinese police while the Olympics went on.
China has unblocked the iTunes store after a Tibtan activists' song left the front page. Subtle. The store was blocked for two whole weeks.
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Could this be because the junta wouldn't let anyone else help?:
The Burmese authorities were by far the greatest providers of medical assistance to its population after cyclone Nargis despite the widespread international criticism of a poor response by the military junta, according to an analysis released on Wednesday.
A report summarised in the latest issue of the World Health Organisation’s Bulletin says government doctors, nurses and midwives were far more active in offering treatment and medicines to cyclone survivors than non-governmental organisations and individual volunteers.
And many of those who protested a year ago are still in prison.
Chaos continues in Thailand as More »